Average-reward reinforcement learning (ARL) is an undiscounted optimality framework that is generally applicable to a broad range of control tasks. ARL computes gain-optimal control policies that maximize the expected payoff per step. However, gain-optimality has some intrinsic limitations as an optimality criterion, since for example, it cannot distinguish between different policies that all reach an absorbing goal state, but incur varying costs. A more selective criterion is bias optimality, which can filter gain-optimal policies to select those that reach absorbing goals with the minimum cost. While several ARL algorithms for computing gain-optimal policies have been proposed, none of these algorithms can guarantee bias optimality, since this requires solving at least two nested optimality equations. In this paper, we describe a novel model-based ARL algorithm for computing bias-optimal policies. We test the proposed algorithm using an admission control queuing system, and show that it is able to utilize the queue much more efficiently than a gain-optimal method by learning bias-optimal policies.

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